Edward Buncombe
Edward Buncombe was a plantation owner from the Province of North Carolina who served as a colonel in the North Carolina militia and Continental Army in the American Revolutionary War. He is the namesake of Buncombe County in western North Carolina. In 1820, his surname became the source of the derogatory American slang term, "bunkum" and its shortened form, "bunk" in consequence of the U.S. representative for the county, Felix Walker, invoking the county during a poorly received speech delivered on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives.
Biography
Buncombe was born in 1742 on the West Indies island of St. Christopher. He grew up there and in England. He immigrated to North Carolina in 1768 and settled at a plantation he had inherited near the shore of Albemarle Sound on the Atlantic coast, in what is now Washington County. In 1774, as the independence movement of the Thirteen Colonies gathered steam, he took a leading role in convening proindependence meetings, especially the First Provincial Congress, which is reportedly the first assembly anywhere in the Thirteen Colonies to defy a royal governor.Service record:
- Tyrrell County Regiment, North Carolina militia
- 9/9/1775, a Colonel in the Tyrrell County Regiment of militia.
- 4/15/1776 until his death in May 1778, Colonel of the 5th North Carolina Regiment
- 10/4/1777, captured at Germantown, POW in Philadelphia, paroled
- May 1778, fell down a flight of stairs, reopened old wounds, died as a result.
Tax records of 1782 say that his estate included of land and 10 Negroes.
In 1791, the State of North Carolina created a new county from parts of two other counties and named it for Col. Buncombe. The present Buncombe County is a combination of parts of the original one with parts of neighboring counties.